Is this 3D Printed Alto Saxophone on Kickstarter Viable? https://ift.tt/3mtCo5n I’ve been playing music in some form or fashion since I was in the first grade, from singing and ringing handbells in various church choirs, taking piano lessons, and playing flute in the high school marching and concert bands to rocking out on the marimba in our school’s indoor winter percussion ensemble. So, whenever I hear a story about 3D printed instruments, my ears perk right up. North Carolina-based data analytics consultant Joe McGuire has been playing the saxophone for over 30 years, and is passionate about sharing his love of music with students young and old through his YouTube channel, Advanced Saxophone Lessons Made Easy (ASLME). He is also, it seems, a fan of 3D printing. About a month ago, he launched a Kickstarter campaign for a high-quality, professional, yet affordable 3D printed alto sax, in order to, as the campaign states, “make music accessible to a much wider demographic.”
However, if you check out the video below, you can see that opinions on playing high-quality saxes differ a little. For example, Jay Metcalf of the Better Sax YouTube channel pitted his professional Yanagisawa A991 alto sax against one he bought on Amazon for less than $300, and found that the cheaper instrument, while obviously of lesser sound quality, was able to hold its own. Some saxy background: even though the instrument is typically made out of brass, it’s part of the woodwind family because the sound is produced through a reed, usually made of woody cane, rather than vibrating your lips in a mouthpiece cup like other brass instruments. With woodwinds, the pitch of a note is controlled by covering holes in the body of the instrument through the pressing of keys. These holes serve to control the air column’s resonant frequency. There are several types of saxophones, but the most common are the alto, baritone, and soprano saxes.
His goal with this Kickstarter is to design, 3D print, assemble, and distribute high-quality alto saxophones to a variety of musicians, from aspiring, inner-city players to the most expert of virtuosos. Unfortunately, the campaign doesn’t seem to be going well. It ends this Saturday, October 31st, and McGuire has only raised $511 of his $5,450 goal. If he somehow manages to raise all of the funds by this Saturday, the money will be used to cover production and distribution costs, but mostly to purchase a high-quality 3D printer and a variety of filaments, which he will test out to find which material will be optimal for making the sax parts. Olaf Diegel made a 3D printed saxophone using Duraform PA nylon powder, while Taiwan’s Industrial Technology Research Institute (ITRI) printed one a year later out of titanium alloy powder, and French company Shape Your Own Sound (SYOS) 3D prints sax and clarinet mouthpieces using ABS plastic. There are obviously multiple options, so I’m not sure which direction filament-wise McGuire would go with his project. Regardless, he’s estimating that the time from design to final 3D printed sax to distribution will be between eight months and a year. The first objective in his Kickstarter campaign will be to design and 3D print an alto sax mouthpiece that “rivals those from the leading manufacturers.” McGuire says that while the outer part of the mouthpiece looks “rather straightforward,” how the interior is formed will really impact the sound. A friend of mine from college, who has some experience with 3D printing and is an accomplished sax player himself, can vouch for this. He told me he tried a 3D printed mouthpiece for his instrument, which did not go well because he wasn’t able to get the correct geometry or accomplish an airtight seal on the actual printer. He managed a few squawking noises, but that was it. But McGuire seems confident that once he’s tested his as-yet un-purchased printer with different designs and materials, he should be able to finish the mouthpiece in less than four months. The next part of the project will be designing the neck, which seems difficult to me because of its more complex design feature: the small hole at the top of the neck must be completely open sometimes and completely sealed at others.
Even so, the estimated time for designing and 3D printing the neck of the alto sax is about 1-2 months. The most challenging part of the design, and the 3D printing, will be the body of the saxophone, which tracks with what another skilled sax-playing friend of mine said: “The hard part will be the keys.” The hollow tube of the instrument features 25 tone holes, each of which must “perfectly rounded for the optimal response.” McGuire will be 3D printing small screws in order to attach the keys, each to be printed separately, that will cover the tone holes.
Again, this is all contingent upon whether or not he makes his Kickstarter goal. If you find this project interesting, you can pledge $10 for no reward, or pledge $40 to receive a personal thank you note from McGuire. A $125 pledge will get you the first working 3D print of his mouthpiece, and for $250, McGuire will print any design that you choose (within reason) and send it to you. The big question here is this: would a 3D printed saxophone be viable? I don’t know the answer to that. I mentioned earlier that an accomplished sax player tested out a cheap sax against his own expensive, professional one, and found that it performed decently…if you’re a beginner, that’s really all you need, and accessibility to good instruments is what McGuire is trying to achieve. But what about the professionals who shell out thousands to buy the best of the best? Would a 3D printed sax cut the mustard, so to speak? Above is a video from 2009 that shows how a saxophone is traditionally manufactured. At one point in time, the methods used there were also brand new, just as 3D printing once was, so part of me thinks, if we’re able to scan and print patient-specific dental aligners and hearing aids, surely the technology can handle a musical instrument. But on the other hand, Laurent Lacombe, the co-founder of Creadditive, acknowledged that the sound his 3D printed violin made was not identical to the sound a traditional hand-crafted violin would make, and Ottawa Symphony Orchestra concertmaster and violin teacher Mary-Elizabeth Brown said the instrument she tried “had a different kind of soul” than her own violin. So in my humble opinion, the viability of 3D printed instruments is still up for debate. Printing via 3DPrint.com | The Voice of 3D Printing / Additive Manufacturing https://3dprint.com October 28, 2020 at 07:32AM
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